Those Still Unfilled/ Undecided Senate Seats

In light of Obama's Team of Rivals strategy, could this be a way of obtaining 60 Democratic Senate seats?

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Update: Those Still Unfilled/ Undecided Senate Seats
http://www.npr.org/blogs/politicaljunkie/2008/12/update_those_still_unfilledund.html

Well, I checked under the tree yesterday, and there were still no Senate replacements in Illinois, New York or Colorado, and still no winner in Minnesota.

Disappointed, I went out and saw The Curious Case of Benjamin Button -- and came away even more disappointed. This had nothing to do with campaign buttons at all. They wouldn't give me my money back. The good news is that when I got home, I was 11 years old.

But back to those unresolved Senate seats. Here's the latest on the states, listed alphabetically:

COLORADO --

Gov. Bill Ritter (D) is obviously in no hurry to tip his hand on which Democrat he'll name to replace Sen. Ken Salazar (D) once he joins the Obama Cabinet as interior secretary. It seems that Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper, who retains high approval ratings, is getting the most mention. The mayor told the Rocky Mountain News that he'd be interested in replacing Salazar: "To work in Washington at this critical time," he said, "at this moment in history, would be incredibly exciting and challenging and I think rewarding."

Also adding her name to the mix is former state Sen. Polly Baca, who would be the nation's first Hispanic woman in the Senate (as well as Colorado's first woman). It's a rapidly growing list, as retiring state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff, Rep. Diana DeGette, two-time Senate candidate Tom Strickland, Rep. Ed Perlmutter, former state Senate President Joan Fitz-Gerald, Denver School Superintendent Michael Bennet and oil heiress Swanee Hunt have all either expressed interest in the appointment or have said they would consider it.

One name also being bandied about is Salazar's older brother, Congressman John Salazar, who for obvious reasons has been keeping a low profile as the jockeying intensifies.

There are risks for Ritter and the Dems with several of these choices. Some say DeGette may be too liberal to win statewide (though that's what they said about Mark Udall, who left his Boulder-centered congressional district to easily win a Senate seat this year). Of all the members of Congress out there, John Salazar's House seat may be toughest for the Dems to hold.

There are, for the record, some Democrats in Colorado who have ruled out the appointment. They include state Treasurer Cary Kennedy and former Denver Mayor and Clinton Cabinet official Federico Pena

Whoever is named will have to run in 2010, when Sen. Salazar's term would have expired.

Ritter will also have to name a successor to Secretary of State Mike Coffman (R), who was elected to Congress last month to replace retiring Republican Tom Tancredo. If Romanoff doesn't get the Senate appointment he could be the next Secretary of State.

(Sec/State update: see Wilson Pruitt's comment below.)


ILLINOIS --

The state House of Representatives meets again on Monday to discuss impeaching Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D), who has been accused of, among other things, offering to sell the Senate seat formerly held by President-elect Barack Obama to the highest bidder. Blagojevich, who was arrested Dec. 9 on corruption charges, has refused demands that he resign. One of his attorneys, Ed Genson, has told state legislators he wants them to subpoena more than a dozen witnesses, including Rep. Rahm Emanuel. It has already been acknowledged by Team Obama that Emanuel, who will leave Congress to become the new White House chief of staff, has had conversations with the governor and his former chief of staff, John Harris, about the Senate vacancy. (Harris was arrested with the governor last month.)

Also on Genson's subpoena wish list are Valerie Jarrett, who considered but then ruled herself out of Senate consideration, and Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., once thought to be high on the list of potential appointees.

Now that list is in tatters. It is not clear who has been fatally compromised by the investigation. It is not clear when or if Blagojevich will be removed from office, and so it is not clear who will be appointing the next senator. Republicans, of course, would love a special election, which was once called for by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) -- a call that was muted once Dems realized they could lose the seat.

Naughty, not nice. A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll released on Christmas Eve named Blagojevich as the "naughtiest" politician in 2008. He topped the list with 56 percent, followed by ex-New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer with 23 percent and former presidential candidate John Edwards at 19 percent. Spitzer and Edwards were involved in sex scandals.


MINNESOTA --

The news has not been good lately for Sen. Norm Coleman (R), who trails Democratic challenger Al Franken by 47 (count 'em) votes in the latest tally. The Coleman camp is claiming that anywhere between 130 and 150 votes in Democratic areas may have been counted twice, but the state Supreme Court ruled against the claim, saying there was no way of determining that short of going through still another hand recount of the 2.9 million votes that were cast on Nov. 4. Republicans are suggesting more legal challenges.

There are still some 1,600 absentee ballots that were incorrectly rejected on Election Day. But the court ruled that the votes won't be counted unless both sides agree on each individual ballot.

One thing is clear: There will be no winner declared in 2008, and probably not before Jan. 6, when the new Congress is sworn in.


NEW YORK --

If Norm Coleman is not having a good time of it, it's been worse for Caroline Kennedy. The daughter of the late President John F. Kennedy made it clear that she would love to be appointed to the Senate once Hillary Clinton is confirmed as secretary of state. That was all well and good. But then it no longer became well or good. Kennedy's "listening tour" of upstate N.Y., modeled after Clinton's 1999 tour, didn't go according to plan. Instead of people throwing bouquets at her, she found herself getting hit with words like "entitlement" and "elitism." She met with more politicians than real voters (a "drive-by visit," wrote the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle), took only written questions from the media (and then gave less than satisfactory answers), is refusing to answer questions about her finances (not until she's appointed, she says), hasn't opened up her checkbook to any New York Democratic candidate in the past decade (except for New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, reports the Daily News' Michael Saul), has a spotty voting record, and has backed away from committing to support the Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City next year.

And on that last point, that's because one of her key sponsors for the Senate is thought to be NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a Democrat who was elected mayor twice as a Republican but who is now an independent. Bloomberg had the City Council temporarily remove the two-term limit so he could run again in 2009. Bloomberg has been one of the city's most popular mayors in history, but there has been a bit of backlash to his end run around term limits. There are many indications that Bloomberg and his political machine are solidly behind Kennedy's Senate bid.

Meanwhile, there are more and more signs indicating that Gov. David Paterson (D), who will make the appointment, is starting to resent the "inevitability" of Caroline that her supporters are suggesting. (Not long ago, Paterson was thought to resent the efforts of state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo to get himself appointed. Caroline has apparently replaced Andrew -- who was once married to her cousin -- as the focus of his resentment.) The Daily News reports that at a Wednesday news conference, when a reporter suggested Kennedy was the front-runner for the spot, Paterson shot back, "How is she a front-runner?"

Others thought to be high on the list as potential appointees: Tom Suozzi, the Nassau County (Long Island) executive, as well as several members of Congress, starting with Steve Israel from Long Island, Kirsten Gillibrand from upstate and Brian Higgins of Buffalo.

Paterson, like Colorado's governor, does not seem to be in any hurry to name a senator. By all indications, an appointment may not come until late January or even February.

Whoever is appointed will have to run in 2010, to fill the final two years of Clinton's term, and then again in 2012.

That's it for me in 2008. Have a safe, healthy and Happy New Year, and I'll see you in 2009.
 

maildude

Postal Paranoiac
No worries. Just the same kind of political jockeying both parties do after every election.
 
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